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Island_Oak
Guest
I can’t really comment on the Protestants–as I feel I am ignorant about much of what they teach and how exactly they differ from the Catholic Church.
HOWEVER…I have to say I have been very saddened in recent months with the number of conversations I have had with fellow Catholics who feel they are being driven out of our Church by some of the very absolute positions with respect to challenges to our very imperfect human natures like marriage, divorce, remarriage, infertility, contraception, homosexuality, etc. People are examining their lives and the people in them, their struggles with life issues and faith, and don’t come up with the same conclusion the Church does–namely that because these these loved ones (or themselves) fall short of a moral ideal, they are evil, living lives of mortal sin, are condemned to hell without confession/conversion, etc. Many feel they are incapable of meeting the Church’s many very high standards of discipline, self-control and are frankly exhausted with being reminded of their failures instead of encouraged in the struggle.
HOWEVER…I have to say I have been very saddened in recent months with the number of conversations I have had with fellow Catholics who feel they are being driven out of our Church by some of the very absolute positions with respect to challenges to our very imperfect human natures like marriage, divorce, remarriage, infertility, contraception, homosexuality, etc. People are examining their lives and the people in them, their struggles with life issues and faith, and don’t come up with the same conclusion the Church does–namely that because these these loved ones (or themselves) fall short of a moral ideal, they are evil, living lives of mortal sin, are condemned to hell without confession/conversion, etc. Many feel they are incapable of meeting the Church’s many very high standards of discipline, self-control and are frankly exhausted with being reminded of their failures instead of encouraged in the struggle.